Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Newcastle Herald
Newcastle Herald
Matthew Kelly

Williamtown PFAS class action paves the way for latest settlement

Thousands of landowners around Australia whose properties were contaminated by PFAS-laden firefighting foam used on air force bases have secured a $132.7 million payout.

It follows a $212.5 million settlement reached in 2020 with residents of Williamtown, Katherine (NT), Oakey (Queensland) in 2020 for economic loss caused by PFAS contamination.

Monday's agreement covers sites near Royal Australian Air Force bases at Richmond and Wagga Wagga in NSW, Bullsbrook in Western Australia, Darwin in the Northern Territory, Edinburgh in South Australia, Townsville in Queensland and Wodonga in Victoria.

Parties reached an in-principle, binding agreement at the weekend covering about 30,000 landowners.

The Commonwealth did not adequately prevent toxic chemicals in the foam from escaping and contaminating soil and groundwater, the suit alleged.

It has not admitted liability in the terms of the settlement.

News of the agreement was emailed to the court at about 12.10am on Monday.

The so-called "forever chemicals", which accumulate in the body and do not naturally degrade, are linked to cancers, birth defects and diseases.

Shine Lawyers joint head of class actions Craig Allsopp said in a statement the agreement would save the cost of a risky trial.

"The settlement money, if approved, will go some way to compensate the seven communities in this class action for their losses, however, many are still stuck on contaminated land," he said.

Another case involving Wreck Bay Aboriginal Community Council has been adjourned for further mediation.

Williamtown class action members received $86million as part of the $212.5million settlement made in March 2020.

Members from Katherine received $92.5million and those in Oakey received $34million.

The settlement, believed to be a world-first, compensated class action members for economic losses as a result of PFAS contamination.

It also opened the door for legal action by those who have been exposed to contamination at other Department of Defence sites across.

Speaking in Adelaide on Monday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese welcomed the settlement, saying many people from a range of communities had suffered from the use of the toxic foam.

"We have to get occupational health and safety right ... in the first place - that would avoid these sort of actions," he said.

"The biggest concern that I have with PFAS isn't, of course, a financial one - it is the health outcomes of people who are affected by it."

Members of the class action will be issued further details about the settlement as it approaches approval.

IN THE NEWS:

Masseur behind bars after admitting to sexually touching clients

Contractor to address defective work on South Newcastle skate project

'Idiotic': MP takes aim at vandals after soccer field torn up

Larrie's takeaway brings the fun to Beach Hotel

How Knights skipper Kalyn Ponga stayed positive despite the mounting pressure

To see more stories and read today's paper download the Newcastle Herald news app here.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.